AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate how commonly used eye injection agents affect intraocular pressure (IOP) and their potential link to glaucoma, reviewing 87 articles from prior research.
  • Immediate IOP spikes were observed in all patients after receiving anti-VEGF agents or triamcinolone acetonide, although these spikes tended to decrease over time, while long-term effects showed mixed results influenced by various treatment factors.
  • The research found that most intravitreal agents raise IOP in the short and long term, but there's insufficient evidence regarding their impact on glaucoma onset or progression, although some patients showed signs of retinal nerve fiber layer thinning with extended anti-VEGF treatment.

Article Abstract

To determine the effect of commonly used intravitreal agents on immediate and long-term IOP elevations and their association, if any, with glaucoma. Literature searches in PubMed and the Cochrane databased in January 2020 yielded 407 individual articles. Of these, 87 were selected for review based on our inclusion criteria. Based on the evidence provided, 20 were assigned level I, 27 level II, and 22 level III. Eight articles were rejected because of poor quality, insufficient clarity, or irrelevance based on standardized protocols set out by the American Academy of Ophthalmology. The studies that reported on short-term IOP elevation (i.e., between 0 and 60 min) showed that an immediate increase in IOP is seen in all patients who receive anti-VEGF agents or triamcinolone acetonide when measured between 0 and 30 min of intravitreal injection and that the IOP elevation decreases over time. The data on long-term IOP elevation were mixed; Pretreatment with glaucoma medications, anterior chamber tap, vitreous reflux, longer intervals between injections, and longer axial lengths were associated with lower IOP elevations after injection of anti-VEGF agents, while the position of the implant vis-à-vis, the anterior chamber was important for steroid therapy. Data were mixed on the relationship between IOP increase and the type of intravitreal injection, number of intravitreal injections, preexisting glaucoma, and globe decompression before injection. There were no data on the onset or progression of glaucoma in the studies reviewed in this assessment. However, some studies demonstrated RNFL thinning in patients receiving chronic anti-VEGF therapy. Most, if not all, intravitreal agents cause ocular hypertension, both in the short term and long term. The functional consequences of these observations are not very clear.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7933876PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/ijo.IJO_1028_20DOI Listing

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